Felix Oberholzer-Gee
Felix Oberholzer-Gee is a Swiss academic.[1] He is the Andreas Andresen Professor of Business Administration in the Strategy Unit at Harvard Business School. A member of the faculty since 2003, Professor Oberholzer-Gee received his master's degree, summa cum laude, and his Ph.D. in Economics from the University of Zurich.[2]
File sharing
    
Oberholzer-Gee and Koleman Strumpf wrote The effect of file sharing on record sales: An empirical analysis, which was published in 2007; and in 2008 was cited during the Pirate Bay trial.
Their analysis indicated that file-sharing of music had negligible impact on CD sales, though this has been disputed by the recording industry[3] and other [4] researchers.[5][6] However these critiques were never peer reviewed (unlike the original paper) and the authors have received significant funding from the record industry.
References
    
- Broughton, Philip Delves (2010). What They Teach You At Harvard Business School: My Two Years Inside the Cauldron of Capitalism. London, U.K.: Viking. pp. 147–148. ISBN 9780141046488. OCLC 559782256.
 - Felix Oberholzer-Gee - Harvard Business School
 - CNET retrieved 24/3/2009
 - "Newsroom".
 -  Liebowitz, Stan J. (September 2007). "How Reliable is the Oberholzer-Gee and Strumpf Paper on File-Sharing?". 
{{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires|journal=(help) - "Steven Levitt blocks an undesired statement: No comment, please".
 
Further reading
    
- Oberholzer-Gee, Felix & Strumpf, Koleman (March 2004). "The effect of file sharing on record sales: An empirical analysis"
 - Liebowitz, Stan J. (Sept 2016). "Why the Oberholzer-Gee and Strumpf Paper on File-Sharing is not credible"
 - Liebowitz, Stan J. (May 2017). "Responding to Oberholzer-Gee and Strumpf’s Attempted Defense of Their Piracy Paper"
 - Liebowitz, Stan J. (May 18, 2017). "A Replication of Four Quasi-Experiments and Three Facts from ‘The Effect of File Sharing on Record Sales: An Empirical Analysis’ (Journal of Political Economy, 2007)"
 - Felix Oberholzer-Gee had a conversation with Rishabh Chaddha (Contributor) about his book "Better, Simpler Strategy" and its writing process.